Skip to content
Advertisement

Technology_Internet

Latest Stories

6aef7e24a0f6a610520f6a7067006ebd.jpg

6aef7e24a0f6a610520f6a7067006ebd.jpg

This Wednesday, April 23, 2014 photo provided by Google shows the Google driverless car navigating along a street in Mountain View, Calif. The director of Google's self-driving car project wrote in a blog post Monday, April 28, that development of the technology has entered a new stage: trying to master driving on city streets. Many times more complex than freeways, which the cars can now reliably navigate, city streets represent a huge challenge. (AP Photo/Google)

d2afd17ba0f5a610520f6a706700eac6.jpg

d2afd17ba0f5a610520f6a706700eac6.jpg

FILE - In this Sept. 25, 2012, file photo, Google co-founder Sergey Brin gestures after riding in a driverless car with officials, to a bill signing for driverless cars at Google headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. Google engineers say they have turned a corner in their pursuit of creating a car that can drive itself. Test cars have been able to navigate freeways comfortably for a few years. On Monday, April 28, 2014, Google said the cars can now negotiate thousands of urban situations that would have stumped them a year or two ago. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)

c3727b50a0aba510520f6a7067001060.jpg

c3727b50a0aba510520f6a7067001060.jpg

FILE - In this May 21, 2013, file photo, Nancy Tellem, right, the entertainment and digital media president of Microsoft, and Bonnie Ross, left, general manager and studio head of 343 Industries, announce a new “Halo” live-action TV series for Xbox Live, during an event to unveil the next-generation Xbox One entertainment and gaming console system, in Redmond, Wash. The studio is working on a live-action series based on the "Halo" sci-fi shooter with filmmaker Steven Spielberg serving as an executive producer, as well as a multi-part “Halo” movie to be executive produced by Ridley Scott. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

daf1fe90a0aaa510520f6a706700fb1c.jpg

daf1fe90a0aaa510520f6a706700fb1c.jpg

FILE - In this Aug. 28, 2013, file photo, the Microsoft Xbox One console is on display at the GameStop Expo in Las Vegas. Among the shows coming to Xbox this year are the street soccer docu-series "Every Street United," which will be first to debut in July 2014, and the six-part tech-centric documentary series "Signal to Noise." The first installment - "Atari: Game Over" - chronicles the search for copies of Atari's infamous "E.T." game that were supposedly buried in a landfill. (Photo by Al Powers/Invision/AP, File)

8864b9b6a0afa510520f6a706700c211.jpg

8864b9b6a0afa510520f6a706700c211.jpg

This April 16, 2013 photo provided by Microsoft shows Nancy Tellem, director of Xbox programming, at Microsoft Studios in Redmond, Wash. Among the shows coming to Xbox this year are the street soccer docu-series "Every Street United," which will be first to debut in July 2014, and the six-part tech-centric documentary series "Signal to Noise." Tellem said an Xbox Originals app would be added to the consoles' user interface, and each new Xbox show might be distributed differently. (AP Photo/Microsoft, Stuart Isett)

ca17e350a0a8a510520f6a706700598e.jpg

ca17e350a0a8a510520f6a706700598e.jpg

This photo provided by Microsoft shows a scene from the upcoming “Halo” video game for the Xbox One. After nearly two years since launching a studio to create new shows to be streamed on Xbox consoles, Microsoft is finally ready to serve an assorted helping of original programming this summer for the Xbox 360 and Xbox One. However, viewers shouldn't expect Xbox Originals, as they're called, to be available the same way that content is on Netflix and Hulu. (AP Photo/Microsoft)